Neonatal Hyperoxia Activates Activating Transcription Factor 4 to Stimulate Folate Metabolism and Alveolar Epithelial Type 2 Cell Proliferation.
Min YeeAndrew N McDavidEthan David CohenHeidie L HuyckCory PooleBrian J AltmanWilliam M ManiscalcoGail H DeutschGloria S PryhuberMichael A O'ReillyPublished in: American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology (2022)
Oxygen supplementation in preterm infants disrupts alveolar epithelial type 2 (AT2) cell proliferation through poorly understood mechanisms. Here, newborn mice are used to understand how hyperoxia stimulates an early aberrant wave of AT2 cell proliferation that occurs between Postnatal Days (PNDs) 0 and 4. RNA-sequencing analysis of AT2 cells isolated from PND4 mice revealed hyperoxia stimulates expression of mitochondrial-specific methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase 2 and other genes involved in mitochondrial one-carbon coupled folate metabolism and serine synthesis. The same genes are induced when AT2 cells normally proliferate on PND7 and when they proliferate in response to the mitogen fibroblast growth factor 7. However, hyperoxia selectively stimulated their expression via the stress-responsive activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4). Administration of the mitochondrial superoxide scavenger mitoTEMPO during hyperoxia suppressed ATF4 and thus early AT2 cell proliferation, but it had no effect on normative AT2 cell proliferation seen on PND7. Because ATF4 and methylenetetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase are detected in hyperplastic AT2 cells of preterm infant humans and baboons with bronchopulmonary dysplasia, dampening mitochondrial oxidative stress and ATF4 activation may provide new opportunities for controlling excess AT2 cell proliferation in neonatal lung disease.
Keyphrases
- cell proliferation
- transcription factor
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- preterm infants
- cell cycle arrest
- cell cycle
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- diabetic rats
- poor prognosis
- dna binding
- low birth weight
- single cell
- cell death
- stress induced
- protein kinase
- metabolic syndrome
- inflammatory response
- high glucose
- heat shock
- cancer therapy
- preterm birth
- binding protein
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- drug induced
- gestational age
- heat stress
- genome wide analysis